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June 27, 2011 | National Law Journal

'Do-gooders' thrive

More freshly minted lawyers are opting for public interest careers, indicating a shift in the way those careers are perceived and how young lawyers prepare for public interest jobs.
8 minute read
July 30, 2009 | National Law Journal

Record-keeping initiative tracks Dupont legal department's revenue

It pays to keep score. At least it does at DuPont, where the legal department launched an initiative five years ago to closely track its recoveries — matters in which the company successfully brought in cash or other assets as the result of a dispute. The company announced this week that its Legal Recoveries Initiative has generated nearly $1.2 billion in recoveries since it started in 2004.
4 minute read
December 10, 2008 | New York Law Journal

Cacace v. Meyer Marketing (Macau Commercial Offshore) Co. Ltd.

License Agreement Ambiguous; Issues Exist If Pans Triggered Royalty Payments on Patent
1 minute read
December 20, 2012 | New York Law Journal

Daebo Int'l Shipping v. Americas Bulk Transport (BVI)

Alter Egos Dismissed From Second Amended Complaint Properly Naming Plaintiff
1 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book New Jersey Business Litigation 2025 Authors: Paul A. Rowe, Andrea J. Sullivan View this Book

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April 01, 2005 | Legaltech News

Resolving an Identity Crisis

With 69 offices, creating a single image was difficult.
6 minute read
August 08, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal

Assessment of Interpreter Fees by the Court

Notice to the bar.
2 minute read
July 02, 2007 | National Law Journal

Civil Actions

3 minute read
December 13, 2006 | Law.com

N.Y. Law Firm Makes Bells Toll for Toll Booths

Sometimes 75 cents is all it takes to get an attorney in a fighting mood. For years, Michael Powers, a partner with 170-attorney Phillips Lytle in Buffalo, N.Y., said that he had been offended by the toll booth on Interstate Highway 190, which charged 75 cents to motorists entering the city. When a local businessman came to him and asked him if there was a legal basis to challenge the toll booths, Powers took the case. And the firm decided to cover 75 percent of the expenses on behalf of the community.
3 minute read
March 25, 2003 | Law.com

DA Hallinan Dissed in Cop Dismissal Motion

Defense lawyers for San Francisco police brass indicted on conspiracy charges argued Monday that the case is the result of a grand jury process guided by illegal evidence, conjecture, mismanagement and a failure to instruct jury members on the legal definition of conspiracy. The lawyers say District Attorney Terence Hallinan never even provided the grand jury with a definition of conspiracy, making it "highly likely" that the five officers were indicted on something less than probable cause.
4 minute read

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